Smoking in movies in 2000 exceeded rates in the 1960s. Tobacco Control 2001;10:397-8.Kacirk K, Glantz S. Smoking in movies in 2000 exceeded rates in the 1960s. Tobacco Control 2001; 10: 397-98.Kacirk K, Glantz SA. Smoking in movies in 2000 exceeded rates in the 1960s. Tob ...
This article draws on health education material produced on smoking in the 1950s and 1960s in West Germany to question the extent to which smoking and health disappeared from the agenda in the post war decades, following the experience of anti-smoking propaganda during the Third Reich. It sugge...
"A person who smokes cigarettes regularly yet is otherwise healthy, without Type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure, is still at risk for poor brain health," said Neal S. Parikh, M.D., M.S., senior author of the study and an assistant professor of neurology and neuroscience in the clini...
30In the 1960s and 1970s, psychiatrists faced growing public criticism for theirtreatment settings, their approaches to patients, and even their definitions ofmental illness. Social-science theorists and researchers such as R. D. Laing andErving Goffman, along with psychiatrist Thomas Szasz, publical...
as compared with women who had never smoked, the relative risks of death from lung cancer were 2.73, 12.65, and 25.66 in the 1960s, 1980s, and contemporary cohorts, respectively; corresponding relative risks for male current smokers, as compared with men who had never smoked, were 12.22, 23...
but only about 1% of those born in the 1960s did so. Hence, overall female deaths caused by tobacco are decreasing, and less than 1% of deaths in women born since 1960 are due totobacco. Other studies, however, have shown a recent increase in smoking uptake by young women that could ...
Among women, it was apparent that smoking prevalence increased with successive birth cohorts and peaked in the late 1940s or early 1950s. Increases in cohort-specific lung cancer mortality were also seen, and the later-born cohorts with the highest smoking prevalence displayed the highest rates ...
Lung cancer mortality rates were computed for nonsmokers in the American Cancer Society's prospective study for three 4-year periods from 1960 to 1972 and ... L Garfinkel - 《Journal of the National Cancer Institute》 被引量: 517发表: 0年 Passive Smoking and Risk of Peripheral Arterial Disea...
In the early 1960s, roughly 42 percent of U.S. adults smoked. It was common nearly everywhere - in office buildings, restaurants, airplanes and even hospitals. The decline has coincided with a greater understanding that smoking is a cause of cancer, heart disease and other health problems. ...
This article focuses on the long-standing, but recently intensified controversy over cigarette smoking. In the late 1960s and the 1970s a variety of laws and regulations were implemented to regulate smoking and the smoker. Initially these strictures were what Gusfield terms assimilative, but mor...